The bar will serve both alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks... I wonder if one kind of drink will outsell the other and by how much.abcaines: It’s evidently a growing trend.
"Why should the devil have all the good drinks?"
The bar will serve both alcoholic and non-alcoholic drinks... I wonder if one kind of drink will outsell the other and by how much.abcaines: It’s evidently a growing trend.
DittoFor the record, I do not and have not chosen to drink at all for my own personal (not Biblical) reasons.
abcaines: It’s evidently a growing trend.
Back when I was drinking, my drink of choice was craft brews. I must admit I drank quite a bit. So much so, my wife expressed concerns about how much beer I was drinking. I listened to her... I began drinking shots with my beer and drastically cut back on my beer consumption!It's a trend that comes and goes. In the early 2000s, spirits were out and beer was all the rage. Later, along came the "wine moms." And so forth.
and they likewise should not be condemned and branded as a legalist for their own personal convictions.
Do you believe Stewart Hamblen was a legalist because he refused to continue to advertise beer cmmercials after his conversion? He didn't try to force anyone to quit drinking. Is a Christian a legalist because he doesn't want liquor stores in his community and votes to not allow them? Some lines aren't necessarily black and white. Crime is another reason people don't want businesses like that in their neighborhood.Depends on whether they're presenting their "personal convictions" as laws for everyone else or not.
Do you believe Stewart Hamblen was a legalist because he refused to continue to advertise beer cmmercials after his conversion? He didn't try to force anyone to quit drinking.
Should I "abstain from the appearance of evil" by avoiding the drugstore, because while I just need more aspirin, as a single guy, someone might see me and think I was buying condoms?
(That verse is talking about scrutinizing true and false teachers in any case, not keeping away from looking evil.)
Abstaining from the appearance of evil is exactly why Billy Graham, Charles Spurgeon and others take personal stands the way they do. You may not think that is a good reason but many Christians do. Stewart Hamblen took the stand he did, not because he was trying to force anyone to not buy beer but because he believed he would be a bad influence on others that were in his situation for so many years.Well, since I'm sure you read what I actually wrote and aren't just using it as a springboard to keep pontificating, you just answered your own question.
Abstaining from the appearance of evil is exactly why Billy Graham, Charles Spurgeon and others take personal stands the way they do.
You may not think that is a good reason but many Christians do.
I have found if I take just a little bit, say a 5oz serving, I become given over to it and want to continue consuming to unacceptable levels. Once I admitted such to myself (as well as to the Lord) I completely lost all desire for it.3 Not given to wine,...
It's the same in Greek. I would take the variety of wording as just that, not necessarily a distinction in how bishops and deacons may approach wine.Verse 3 uses a different phrase than verse 8. Bishops - not given to wine; deacons - not given to *much* wine.
Is it? I admit I'm not a Greek scholar, but when I look at e-Sword in both the Greek NT TR+ & Green NT WH+, they have different wording. Is e-Sword not reliable for the Greek?It's the same in Greek.
Sorry, I could have been clearer. I meant that in Greek as in English, 1 Tim. 3 vv. 3 and 8 use different phrases meaning basically the same thing. The situation is the same, not the wording.Is it? I admit I'm not a Greek scholar, but when I look at e-Sword in both the Greek NT TR+ & Green NT WH+, they have different wording. Is e-Sword not reliable for the Greek?
That's the best point you've ever made on the forum.